Shows that the system is prevented from sleeping by a ton of serverd processes.
INDIGO SERVER HIGH SIERRA UPGRADE
While all of the other upgrades added new features and functionality, the macOS Server 5.4 upgrade moved some services into High Sierra and removed other functions that some organizations may find critical. Shows that PreventUserIdleSystemSleep is set to 1 and NetworkClientActive is 1, too. Along with the many other recent operating system upgrades, macOS Server was quietly bumped up to version 5.4 on Sept. I've tried setting the following: defaults write NSAppSleepDisabled -bool YESĪnd while I first thought it might be working, was proven wrong today.
![indigo server high sierra indigo server high sierra](https://i.ytimg.com/vi/stjb29PLdi0/maxresdefault.jpg)
I go back to the iMac (even remotely through a shared desktop) or move the mouse or tap on the keyboard, and *poof*, the messages get filtered properly - as observed on iOS, remotely. I can SSH onto the system, and can do anything I like, but while the system is awake, the Mail app doesn't wake up. I've got several rules set, and I can tell that Mail has snoozed off when I open Mail on my iPhone or iPad and see a ton of messages in my inbox that should've been filed elsewhere.
![indigo server high sierra indigo server high sierra](https://cdn11.bigcommerce.com/s-p0ynm9zuq3/images/stencil/1280w/products/25089/112647/cp2135__00016.1604309846.jpg)
The computer never appears to sleep - I can access my services regularly, even after not having touched the machine for days. Incoming Mail Server: : Port 110: Outgoing Mail Server: / : Port 25 : Primary DNS: 194.125.133. I've got the screen set to go to sleep after 1 hour, and the computer to never sleep (it's running Indigo, jabberd, iTunes, and Server, so I don't want it to sleep, ever). I'm running macOS High Sierra 10.13.4 on a 2009 iMac.